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How Do I Deal With This Death?

Topic: Personal DevelopmentBy Jim MathesonPublished Recently added

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Death comes to all. It is only a question of when.

Woody Allen said it best: "I'm not afraid of dying. I just don't want to be there when it happens."

There are many people who believe that life never ends, that we live forever or return to live again through reinca
ation. And there are those who believe that is complete nonsense. And there are those who simply do not know and who fear the unknown they call death.

Every day we experience hundreds of thousands of deaths within our own bodies as cells die and are replaced by new cells. We do not focus our attention on these departed cells nor do we mou
their passing, even though they gave us life itself.

And yet we do mou
the passing of friends, family, pets and dear ones. And sometimes we mou
the loss of those we do not even know and have never met.

When it comes to death there are three things you can do:nndelay itndeny itnaccept it ...

Whichever you choose, it really does not matter. Death is the ultimate changer of matter. What once was is no more. What once was will be transformed either into dust or another life, two things which are not at all mutually exclusive or different.

But let's be very practical for a moment. How do you deal with the phenomenon we call death? Most people cry and feel sad. Others feel relief or perhaps even momentary joy if they consider the person who died an 'enemy'. How can we cope? We can read books or talk or sleep or choose other options. And yet, to be fully present with one's own grief, is the eventual choice we must all make. The longer we put this off, the longer our grieving will last.

And remember that every death, whoever, however, whenever, sees the transformation of a part of our very existence, of our very selves, for we are all One. There is only one of us in the room, in the country, in the world, in existence. Therefore, what we wish upon another is what we wish upon ourselves. When another dies, a part of us also dies.

And may this serve to remind us all, that we are not alone.

Article author

About the Author

Jim Matheson has lived many changes, many lives and studied with some of the planet's leading changemakers. He can be found at www.thejoyofchange.com. He lives in Toronto Canada.

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